Exclusive?

She creates the illusion of an endless hallway and sings to the player. The voice constantly shifts in position and is thus impossible to locate. In the remake, she deals stamina damage to the player.

She is most likely derived of the classic Kumiho found in Korean folklore. There are other versions of this spirit to be found in Chinese and Japanese folklore. In every version, they are foxes that take on the form of attractive women to trick people (mostly men) into doing their will. There is also an air of magic to them; most tales speak of them being able to make people hallucinate.

The Japanese Kitsune and the Chinese Huli Jing are said to be either good or bad spirits; aiding people and merely playing pranks at their best and eating men's hearts and livers at their worst.

The Korean Kumiho is the most malevalent of the different versions, some tales even speak of them sucking out people's souls. Due to the game being a Korean creation, it is fair to assume that the fox spirit is a Kumiho.

Seeing as the fox spirit encountered in White Day never truly hurts the player, even when scaring him, the spirit seems to be curious and mischievous, but ultimately harmless, only wanting to play a prank on whoever enters her passageway.

Contents

The Ghost Story

Game Play

Original

When you try to go to the New Building without an Earth amulet, You will be wandering in the non-ending repeated Passageway, hearing a woman's voice who is singing ("여우야! 여우야! 뭐하니?"~ / "Yeo-u-ya! yeo-u-ya! mwo hani?"~ : "Fox! Fox! What are you doing?"~ ).She ends the song by yelling "I'm Alive!" ( "살았다!" ).

There are two ways for her to finish the song. She either finishes the song normally or yelling with the intention of scaring the player. If she decides to scare the player (yelling "I'm Alive!"( "살았다!" )), this results in stamina damage. Wether she decides to scare the player or not is randomized.